This is precisely why I’ve turned to using this astounding bookmark manager for my Reddit saves across accounts. Very robust customization with tagging, collections, manual sorting, backups, the works. Public code on GitHub. Privacy-minded.
After a few months I sprung for the inexpensive pro version because I can’t fathom the developer dropping support.
I think there’s not THE answer on the question if there’s a better alternative to Evernote. Because it depends on WHAT you use Evernote for. If you need a file cabinet/a second brain, I don’t think you can beat Evernote. But if you use Evernote mainly for note taking/writing there are definitely better apps, e.g. Bear or Craft.do - one of those apps you fall in love with when you start using them - but you really need to USE them to see why they are so great. If you are a researcher, Devonthink might be the right tool for you. Notion again is a great project management tool, in case you look for that. If you want to build up your own wiki, Roam or Obsidian maybe perfect for you. If you want to bookmark stuff, please take a look at the fanatastic raindrop.io.
Nimbus Note comes IMHO closest to Evernote at a better price. And Nimbus Note is better at a LOT of things compared to Evernote. It’s like a mixture of Evernote and Notion. The editor is so much better than Evernote’s editor if you like the concept of blocks. It offers fantastic tables and much more. So Nimbus Note maybe good for you if you need something of everything. If they redesign the app, it could be a reason for me to switch. Evernote looks much better and I like working with beautiful apps - again, look at craft.do in case you also like beautiful apps (like Things 3). :-)
Still I guess Evernote is a fantastic product, that does some things so much better than other apps. And maybe they can really bring back the functionality of the old Evernote before they made the not so successfull step to Version 10.
I've struggled with v10. It's just horribly slow for me. I have so much and so many different workflows that feed into Evernote with automations, email, IFTTT, import folders, etc. No one alternative can do it all, or well enough the way I use Evernote as it exists today. I have to give up too much to go to anything else. I've gone back and forth between V10, Evernote Legacy, Nimbus Note, Joplin, NoteJoy, Alternote, OneNote, Obsidian, and just plain old flat files in OneDrive. I mainly use Evernote as a digital filing cabinet, so I don't care about the flashy note taking and formatting or editing. I just want somewhere to store my stuff where I can get to it from anywhere, quickly.
I've been using Raindrop.io much more for just saving stuff I find on the web. It works very well for that - to save stuff to read later, and keep permanent copies of pages that may change or go offline down the road. Raindrop keeps permanent copies and it's so nice to have. I used to do this in Evernote, but it's slowness makes it very difficult for me to use it. Raindrop is wickedly fast. Being able to upload PDF files and pictures to my account helps take some load off of my dependency for Evernote, but I still need it for my online receipts and bills and other miscellaneous notes and calendar integration for bill reminders and stuff like that.
I have until July before my premium subscription expires, so I hope that either Evernote gets their collective shit together before then, or someone steps up to be a true contender as a complete replacement for my use cases.
To pull in everything from Raindrop in one go:
archivebox add < raindrop_export.html
Or if you want them linked in real-time, pull in your Raindrop RSS feed periodically:
archivebox schedule --every=day --depth=1 https://raindrop.io/your/rss/url/here.xml
I don't see anything either in basic Chrome. But as for at least opening saved bookmarks, you have the (last resort?) option of moving to an external bookmarks manager extension that does what you want. My premium bookmark manager ( raindrop.io ) does this, for example.
Well..then one additional option is raindrop.io. They have a desktop and mobile clients. As well as web. It will download the metadata when you bookmark a youtube video in raindrop. The free version is good enough for most people. Only downside is that its not selfhosted and the data is stored in the "cloud".
I don't remember seeing any that charged for bookmarks alone, that's normally free but extra things like full text search, saving content of pages things like that are usually premium features for example the one I can remember the name of off hand https://raindrop.io/pro/buy
just installed it.
so far, its only crashed like once (dragging the active tab out of the window and swinging the mouse about like crazy while downloaded a dmg caused it to crash)
extensions that seem to already work perfectly fine
raindrop.io
honey
bitwarden
dark reader
adguard
I don't store sensitive material with Raindrop.io. Anything else is fair game. I can't store literally anything - they only allow pictures, videos, PDFs, and Office documents. The non-sensitive stuff that I don't keep encrypted in my cloud storage goes out to Raindrop. I have a bunch of integrations with it via IFTTT to save stuff from the web, Inoreader, Reddit, Pocket, and several other sites/services. I usually start with everything in my "Inbox" collection in Raindrop, and if I want to keep it, I'll tag it and move to a collection. I have an IFTTT automation that will add a new entry from Raindrop if I tag it as "from:amazon" and "wishlist", and it will append to a note in Evernote that I use as my "Amazon shopping list" for the next time I buy stuff from there.
Interesting topic. Thanks for all of your answers.
What I do currently:
Some thoughts:
References vs Page Content: There seems to be a difference between (a) adding content in blocks (bullet points) nested under a tag, bookmark, or whatever and (b) adding content on the page itself and adding tags there. This make me question whether I want content to be on the page itself or inside the References. Can't figure this one out yet.. An effect is seen when you want to export a page; References are not inside the export. (But you can still of course copy-paste).
On URL bookmarks: I collect a lot of bookmarks from the internet, currently using Raindrop.io. I've tried doing something similar in Roam, but I don't feel it yet. It's somewhat messier at the moment with more friction to capture, view and organize my bookmarks.
Navigation and Finding Content: The Daily Notes are not always easy to navigate. For example, the further you go back in time, the less easy it becomes to review the info. For recent notes, this is okay although. But let's say you quickly want to browse through a bunch of notes from 5 months ago; you need to scroll through all your Daily Notes of the last 5 months to get to that spot and review. Alternatively, unless you know what you are looking for, and use a lot of tags, which is more like a targeted search. But reviewing in general and 'stumbling' on serendipity thoughts is less obvious in this case. I am still creating/finding a structure to use in Roam in order to at least somewhat organize big buckets of content like: bookmarks, journals, etc...
Firefox Sync does not provide this.
What I mean by "cloud service" is having your bookmarks accessible online with a sign-in using Firefox Account (if you opt-in of course). The point of having this is that you don't need to launch Firefox if you need your bookmarks, you can access the from the Pocket site, or something similar. Pocket does this really well for reading list items/articles, I'd just want to see that expanded to a general cloud bookmarking site similar to https://raindrop.io
Point is, Pocket shouldn't even be/feel like an add-on, it should simply be seamlessly integrated into Firefox's bookmarking system. There shouldn't be such thing as "pocket list vs bookmarks", those two should be the same.
As for user choice, in a world where both Pocket and Firefox bookmarks are the same thing, people opting in to Firefox Sync will have access to their bookmarks online, otherwise bookmarks will stay local.
You would have to come up with a definite answer yourself:
I used it for 15 minutes. Saving a link from Safari to Anybox puts it in Links section and requires me to separately categorize them in Collections. In contrast Raindrop.io allows me to add a bookmark to a specific collection right at the time of saving it. Am I missing a way to directly add to a collection in AnyBox?
Raycast supports a Raindrop extension which allows Quick Search functionality and it searches headers and content I believe. Anybox only searches titles.
Opera is chinese browser. For bookmarks and articles to read later, I use https://raindrop.io/ everywhere. Free is best and paid is beast. And waterfox is of 2 variations, one older and second latest one. You never know what data of yours is going to google or china? I have been using librewolf (no complaints yet) and waterfox. Firefox is uninstalled everywhere after it decided to going against users and downgraded itself with updates. Anyways opera is good but then you can trust china and their apps and games. They are not good at privacy or security.
I use both OneNote and Obsidian.
I actually use multiple tools: Diigo, Evernote, OneDrive, Pocket, Raindrop.io, etc., but all for different purposes. For OneNote, I use it to store screen captures and to create handwritten notes. With Obsidian, I use it to create "personal notes" like a scratchpad.
I still use OneNote for different reasons perhaps like you might need to do to work with tables the way you like
Imagine trying to work if the Internet didn't exist. The Internet's (links) help make things a lot easier. I use Raindrop.io AND I can click that link you posted if I want to see Raindrop.io.
We can create links in OneNote but it's ability to help navigate like we do on the internet is limited. IF I click a link to another OneNote page, I'll wind up on that new page. But that page won't show me a link that takes me back to the previous page. Some web pages can provide that type of history trail. Obsidian can do it too via showing you backlinks.
At Wikipedia (not OneNote), you can hover over a link to see more info. In Obsidian you can hover over a link and see everything that's in it - not just a snippet of information.
Obsidian can also function like a database that can grab information from multiple places and display it on pages and dashboards. Other capabilities exist but you'd have to spend some time exploring them.
If you don't need any of the link handling capabilities that a Wikipedia page provides, maybe you might not need a program like Obsidian, Roam, Logseq, (the list is large). People got by for years using OneNote and it's a good program and a good repository for information we can store in hierarchical form.
Hello.
I get that. And that is okay.
And from my side: I provided you my opinion (as a potential user) about what troubles me the most, to at least try the product. And to other people here, an option which satisfies what I need.
Also a (potentially) useful app for everybody: raindrop.io
Also developed by a single developer. I was using a free model for some time, and decided to subscribe for premium options. Both to support the guy, and to use the new features. And the features are nice to have, but not necessary in any way.
Not here to rain on Bublup. Just providing two other similar apps I'm using for comparison. My first impression of Bublup: its UI doesn't speak to me. Looks dated somehow. So I haven't gone beyond reading about its features.
I already use Raindrop to do Bublup things. Raindrop markets itself as a bookmark manager but does much more in reality. At a brief glance, it appears to do most of what Bublup does apart from the lack of AI and website suggestions. It does auto-suggest tags though. You can also upload files to it (images, videos, documents etc.), as well as save permanent copies of webpages that you've bookmarked. So it can sort of be used as a web clipper.
Another app that has been trying to tempt me from Raindrop lately is MyMind. MyMind uses AI and also appears to do most of what Bublup offers, except that it's totally private and it doesn't believe in folder structures. Artificial intelligence takes care of sorting all your notes and clippings via tags. If it wasn't for my loyalty to Raindrop and MyMind's prohibitive price, I might have considered switching over purely for the AI feature.
That said, I was already using Raindrop concurrently with Evernote. Both Raindrop and MyMind fulfill a different notetaking need of mine and aren't replacements for Evernote IMO. They serve as my 'personal Pinterest board' and bookmark manager and are useful for my design projects because they are more visual than textual.
I have considered it, but I use my Firefox bookmarks for websites I visit often. My Pocket account is more of a collection of memes and interesting articles I come across, and I collect a lot of them. Way too much clutter for regular bookmarks, so I'm just looking for a separate website to save pages on.
The link you attached has raindrop.io as the first suggestion, but I've seen a lot of people recommending against it in this sub, and the privacy policy seems very suspicious. I am very interested in Memex but I really cannot pay for anything at the moment, so I am hesitant to switch to that when it might become paid-only in the next few months.
Raindrop.io is the best solution I've found. I've been using it for a few years and it's tamed all of the bookmarks that I save from my phone and desktop. The browser extension is also quite excellent and refined, and it has an option for one-click adding, and another option for specifying details (folder, tags, etc.). Definitely worth checking out.
Hi OP,
I have a similar question to your, specifically to save links to articles with the ability to type a small blurb-like intro so I don't have to open to get to important info again.
Any insights you have to share after experimenting on the aforementioned Pocket alternatives i.e. Instapaper, Bublup, Raindrop.io, Wallabag?
Depend on what you consider is quick enough. You can use third-party bookmark app like Raindrop.io (this has extension for both Safari on iOS and Firefox on PC), or you can simply paste the link into your Notes app (yep, the iOS Notes), it will automatically sync to iCloud so you can access it on your PC from web at icloud.com/notes/
Yes, I think we all do.
I highly recommend Raindrop.io: it has an Android /ios app, Windows program, browser extensions...
It's a bookmark manager software.
It lets you save any link (but I use it mainly for Reddit posts and articles I want to read), put them in separate folders and also tag them.
It's 2 or 3 clicks instead of 1 to save a link, but I think it's very handy once you have hundreds of them.
Especially the tag function is really great to quickly search for whatever you need right away
I use raindrop.io to store my bookmarks. It puts all new bookmarks in the 'unsorted' section if you don't specify a folder. It can be a good option to sync links between Vivaldi and iOS devices.
Found Raindrop.io Which seems to do the job for now as having some other features though it's a separate client so you need to export your bookmarks and then reimport them if you want to continue using chromes bookmarks. Why isn't this feature in chrome by default.
These are what I use:
There's 2 apps I've seen that work one is Clipboard - Paste Anywhere and the other is Raindrop.io try them out Clipboard just lets you paste links to the app and Raindrop.io is like a bookmarker
Okay.
here the link from ML blog. -> ML -AI - DL Roadmap
you can try raindrop.io
the free version is already good enough. if you want to tag them or categorized them the pricing is also quite reasonable at $3.15 per month.
or if you want more than bookmark like saving inspirational images, videos you can try en.eagle.cool you can tag and categorize all your design files and formats too! including PSD, AI, figma, SVG, font files, etc it offers 30 days free trial then a one-time payment of less than $30 which i think its also reasonable.
hope this two helps
I use a bookmark extension called raindrop.io for bookmarking webpages in different folder, very useful as I use different machines and browsers.
In terms of remembering stuff, I suck on that and will be using the documentation every time.
I use raindrop.io to bookmark everything I like, it's free. I mean, it won't inform you when a fanfic gets deleted, but you can write descriptions of everything you bookmark, tag it.
Oh,
Maybe you want an RSS aggregator that keeps things "forever" or until you delete them?
I'm not sure any publicly hosted solution is designed for that. You might need to send the links to a bookmarking service like Pinboard or Raindrop.io or a read-it-later service like Pocket or Instapaper.
I started capturing web pages using that extension (just copying and pasting from a website works really well in Obsidian too, btw). I don't really get much value from doing that, though.
One option I have been exploring, and am enjoying is using Raindrop for bookmarking. That gives me a sort of Clipper alternative with a searchable archive of stuff I may want to reference later.
I've basically set up a series of IFTTT workflows to capture just about everything I like, bookmark, and find interesting online into Raindrop.
So the Evernote web clipper may not be all that important to me after all. I actually haven't used the Clipper lately, so I guess that is, in itself, telling.
I'm another decade+ Google Bookmarks user who used it every day. I've been giving Raindrop.io a try for the last week. The free version does everything I need it to do with some additional features. I'm happy with it so far.
Try this workaround:
1. Download and install Safari Technology Preview https://developer.apple.com/safari/download/
Now Bitwarden extension should show up as usual in Safari
Thanks to Raindrop.io support.
Discussed previously here:
(i.e. there are probably extensions that can do it - but may cost you - or you may get lucky and your Chrome bookmarks backup file is still around.)
(I am a raindrop.io premium user myself.)
Probably not the response you want but... raindrop.io bookmark manager extension (the premium version) allows icons to be associated with bookmark folders (along with many more nifty features for bookmark aficionados). Not for those on a tight budget though.
OK I mean it's good no doubt, but it's horrible to use on desktop. Almost has a mobile interface and it's so slow. Unless you really need the social stuff with it I would recommend you try out Notion or Raindrop. They are much faster and easier to use (i've tried them since after making this submission)
Same with me due to the latest iOS update. Glad I can finally put the last nail in the coffin on Pushbullet. But I found raindrop.io - it's by far the best alternative I've found (far superior to NowPush). It's not exactly the same, but it seems to be only thing that provides the seamless Mac/iPhone/iPad/Windows experience I'm looking for. And it's got a lot of organizational tools to boot (search, tags, etc.)
​
Raindrop.io — All-in-one bookmark manager
By far the best alternative I've found. It's not exactly the same, but it seems to be only thing that provides the seamless Mac/iPhone/iPad/Windows experience I'm looking for. And it's got a lot of organizational tools to boot (search, tags, etc.)
OK thanks for the info, sounding good. Can Walling also replace Pocket (articles reader and archiver) and is it better than a bookmarker like Raindrop.io?
Walling seems nice but for some reason makes me think it's a very corporate thing for teams and projects. (I feel the same about Notion but I never tried it) I just want something personal.
Thanks for the comparison notes! I am looking for a solution for bookmarks and will check both out. Not sure if I might go with raindrop.io for a start or if I should take the time to set one of those up - either way it's luckily portable between the solutions. I see more and more reasons for getting into self-hosting, but that first step is big and shouldn't be done under pressure to get it working fast imo :)
I am glad to be able to help you! :)
Here's another tip for you: don't be afraid to take inspiration from others.
Obviously, don't copy other sites designs directly, but use lots of references to see how things are done. This is not a copyright issue (as far as I know, you can't copyright a web design as long as you don't copy/paste elements), but a branding issue - you want to be memorable and unique, while keeping up with trends. Try to use a design that is timeless, fads are a great way to get attention - for a few weeks. A good design can last for years.
Keep it simple, especially for a web application, the most important thing is to provide a service that gives the best experience for the least effort.
The design process usually goes like this:
Good luck !
I just started using raindrop.io too, and Apple is throwing up warnings like I haven't seen before, indicating how much data they can view. That is what led me to look within Reddit about it...
Also, I've been using Raindrop.io to save web pages and some content (documents and pictures) instead of using Evernote. I really only use Evernote to save stuff I get in my email, like invoices and receipts. I use the Evernote Gmail plugin, and I very rarely use the Evernote clipper any more. Everything I save now goes to Raindrop.io for triaging, and then from there, I move stuff to different collections and tags. Because it keeps a permanent copy of the webpage I save, I know I'll always have a copy of it even if it goes offline or changes. I'm finding it to be a much more reliable and robust tool for saving stuff I find on the web. I still use Evernote to store my bills, statements, receipts, and various notes. But I'm finding myself using it much less than I used to.
I'm much happier with Raindrop.io than I am with any other service out there. The developer is very responsive and engaged with the customers, and he has come through on support issues and feature requests for me with amazing speed. He has said he doesn't want to compete with Evernote, but he keeps adding features here and there. If it ever adds note creation, I probably won't look back.
Yeah my answer was very short and confusing. It is beacuse i don't use Bookmark manager and save all my links to Pocket (actually i use Raindrop.io now)
With Pocket (or Raindrop) you have more options to organize your bookmarks and save'em on cloud - i guess. And yes, i dont like the sync thing for this.
My daily use sites as set as pinned tabs
HTH
(btw im not sponsored by Mozilla or Raindrop :) )
Late response but Raindrop.io. It literally does everything I wanted Pocket to do (Editing titles, editing descriptions, and editing thumbnails) and holy crap I love it. I got a subscription a few months ago because I loved it so much!
When you say you don't want them saved in the cloud? I know Raindrop.io has a premium option which is reasonably priced for the year and that allows you to back them up to Google Drive/Dropbox. Maybe that covers your needs?
I do not think it is extensions-related; meanwhile several other comments say otherwise. I myself have disabled the only extension that has been updated since I downloaded new Safari (Raindrop.io) and no change...
Oh, and I would recommend taking a look at raindrop.io - a fantastic tool to save web links, videos/movies you would like to watch, stuff you want to buy and so on. I think this might play along very well with Evernote (or Nimbus).
Not that I know of. You can edit what is in the share sheet. So, from the share sheet, swipe the row of app icons at the top and tap the "..." more at the very end of the list. On that screen, you can tap Edit in the upper right. Scroll down and tap the "+" button in front of Raindrop.io. Notice you can also rearrange the icons so Raindrop.io is up front.
Not that I know of. You can edit what is in the share sheet. So, from the share sheet, swipe the row of app icons at the top and tap the "..." more at the very end of the list. On that screen, you can tap Edit in the upper right. Scroll down and tap the "+" button in front of Raindrop.io. Notice you can also rearrange the icons so Raindrop.io is up front.
​
Hope this helps.
Thanks for the mention :) (Maintainer here)
Short note: Floccus experience is currently a bit wild on Firefox, while I sort out some bugs.
​
Other than that I'm looking to implement the best features of Raindrop.io and other tools out there. Feel free to help with feedback, insights and/or code over at https://github.com/nextcloud/bookmarks <3
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
Just wanted to say thank you for a post you made suggesting Raindrop.io for bookmark management.
I couldn't reply on that post since it was a year old or send you a message so I figured this would be the next best way. It's amazing so thank you for bringing it to my attention!
I didn't even know this app existed. I've settled on Fiery Feeds to use Pinboard as a bookmark and read-it-later service. The swipe and quick share integration on iOS is the killer feature for me.
I've tried to sub in Raindrop.io, but using the URL and web interface instead of API integration like with Pinboard is less than ideal.
Plus I can read articles and manage tags in Fiery Feeds. on iOS I can share to Pinboard by sharing to Fiery Feeds. I don't know if the Mac App has that functionality.
I started using Raindrop.io as a bookmark manager in addition to the old school copy/paste link onto Evernote. The dev has rolled out so many new features with the latest release that I've been won over.
Not any more.
Raindrop.io is fantastic.
It offers the same organizational features the same as Evernote (folders "can be nested", tags) and one more feature which made me shift from Evernote, Website validation.
Keep in mind that it stores the web address only, so it not suitable if you are clipping documents (PDF, etc). For documents, I still use Evernote.
I recommend Raindrop as a replacement for the terrible built-in bookmark system. It's open source, has native apps, and has a really excellent extension in the desktop browser. Supports both tags and hierarchies.
I'm excited. And would gladly pay $4.99 as it shows up on my iPhone. I'm using Feedbin and Fiery Feeds, because it gets me Twitter and Pinboard integration.
I do want to see Raindrop.io API support and viewing of untagged Pinboard bookmarks in Fiery Feeds, but I don't think Reeder 5 gets me that.
Widgets and a Mac app are awesome. But those aren't the killer features for me. I usually just want to open a web browser at work and search for something, and work is a Windows machine.
I'm not giving up on Feedbin, so the integrated read later and sync services are great, but also not a killer feature for me.
I might just pay to see what's going on. I've spent more money on less satisfying things.
I use Android/W10, so unfortunately not much help to you.
I did a bit of searching about it. The Pushbullet dev taken the iOS app off the app store after Apple and Facebook made a change. That's a shame! It's a handy app. However...
I looked in to alternatives for you and this one seems pretty good - https://raindrop.io/ - though of course that's speculation on what the site shows. :)
Does the result list from the search field of the Chrome Bookmark Manager do what you want? (Certainly, an bookmarks handling extension like premium raindrop.io with its tags capability sounds like it would be up your alley.)
You could star by using a good bookmarking tool.
My company recently created Pincone so you can give it a look.
But, to be honest, it sounds like raindrop.io might be better suited to your needs.
Good luck!
Ich persönlich bin fast komplett auf digital umgestiegen, die Rezepte die ich finde speicher ich dann quasi einfach als Link ab. Ich verwende dazu Raindrop.io da kann man dann auch die Rezepte in collections unterteilen und taggen.
Sonst haben wir noch eine Best of Rezepte Mappe die wir selbst geschrieben haben oder angewandelt haben :)
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
I can offer something else you might want to try. raindrop.io it's a site where you can store your bookmarks, it's free, and you could store many other sites, not just fanfiction. I use that, because I like to have anything in one place, it's like my "internet management tool" xD You can come up with many, many tags, and give a description as long as you want. For me, it's more pleasant to use this site instead of private bookmarks. This is useful, if I ever forget what the story was about, I can read the description I wrote... Anyways, there are other sites/apps, you might want to experiment with to find out whether you prefer the AO3 bookmarks or something else. About the tags, I have tags like 'dwr' that means 'don't want to read', those are stories that are not bad, but I was not interested. Then I have a tag for stories that were bad. I tag the names of characters the story is about or a ship.
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
Maybe worth looking at something like raindrop.io? It has a free tier with unlimited bookmarks, and apps for all platforms (though I haven’t used Android or Windows myself) & browser extensions,
Can also tag bookmarks & sort them into collections (maybe one per chrome window?).
Audio Equalizer
Bitwarden
Dark theme for Google
Google Translator for Firefox
Imagus
Pushbullet
Reader View
Reddit Comment Collapser
Stylus
Tampermonkey
Tree Style Tab
uBlock Origin
Undo Closed Tabs Button
Youtube Dark Theme
Youtube Search Engine
Yeah, I've thought about this for years, haven't figured out a good way to do it :( I've figured out ways, but I'm not happy with the limitations of them.
This is the closest I've found to what I've been wanting to create, but even that is not 100% what I'm looking for.
Copy of **old** LastPass Help Support web page on the matter that I have saved in a raindrop.io bookmark:
If multiple Authentication methods are used, only one will activate per login attempt. If you disable one, then another will activate on the next log in attempt. Because only one activates at a time, you cannot have multiple prompts during the same log in.
If you have a default multifactor set, it will prompt for that one first. After the first one is disabled, it will prompt based on the order in which multifactor authenticators activate:
Non-Mobile Devices (desktops & laptops) :
1. Yubikey
2. Sesame
3. LastPass Authenticator/Duo Security/Toopher/Transakt**
4. Google Authenticator/Microsoft Authenticator
5. Grid
Mobile Devices (phones & tablets):
1. LastPass Authenticator/Duo Security/Toopher/Transakt**
2. Google Authenticator/Microsoft Authenticator
3. Yubikey
4. Grid
**Only one of these can be enabled at a time.
Please note:
I found links in your comment that were not hyperlinked:
I did the honors for you.
^delete ^| ^information ^| ^<3
>the name field thing didnt work. After a browser restart the || icons are back.
Have you tried with a clean browser profile? Also, since you like to keep several browsers with sync, you might prefer Raindrop.io to do it
I was looking for a better bookmark manager, because running a database outside of my browser has proven to be a pain as well.
I saw https://raindrop.io/ which looks gorgeous, but if you look past the eyecandy, the privacy policy and permissions required are nothing to write home about.
I like your project and please keep up the good work! I don't know if there is much i can contribute as I'm only familiar with Python, but if there is anything, please let me know.
I bookmark everything I read on raindrop.io, it's a site just for bookmarks. Sometimes I'll find the same work twice, but I don't remember I didn't like it, so if I have everything I've read bookmarked, I can easily check if I read it already. I also have little descriptions of every fanfiction I've read, that's how I know if I liked a story or not, but I also have them tagged properly so I can easily find the works I'm currently reading. On AO3 I only bookmarked my favourite stories.
Cludgy solution maybe(?).....Export each collection using Chrome Bookmark manager and than Import on the opposite computer so that you have coexisting sets on both machines. (Import creates a new hierarchy starting from a label named 'Imported' on the bookmarks bar - which can be renamed.)
Elegant solution (but costs bucks for the good version).... raindrop.io extension.
Update: Raindrop.io has become my replacement for bookmarking images. I find that I can copy/paste the URL of the image if it doesn't pick the right one properly. I can also export pinterest boards with Pinback bookmarklet and then import right in to Raindrop.
I don't think other bookmark tools can help you organize better.
Setup your folders and subfolders as categories. Whenever you add a bookmark, place it in the correct category.
What 3rd party bookmark managers different at is usually looking nicer, example: https://raindrop.io/
Keepa (free basic version ) for Amazon historical pricing graphs and target price notifies; Mailtrack (costs) for Gmail sent email read notifications; raindrop.io (costs) for nice bookmarking capabilities; social fixer (free but they want donation) to control Facebook; ebates (free) for purchase discounts when buying done thru ebates.
I have abandoned browser bound bookmarks all together, I'm too much on different computers and different browsers. (Raindrop.io)[raindrop.io] is a strong recommendation, it has the option for tags, folders, sub folders(if you pay for pro) and many other neat features. And since chromium security isn't really amazing anyway I'd rather pay this guy to keep them safe than rely on a single browser.
Future consideration.... use raindrop.io... the nifty bookmark manager tool. PRO version costs money but it's a good tool to have and the developer has recently announced he's quit his day job to focus solely on the product now. There appears to be a Safari version.
Thanks for the elucidation. Other then using some bookmarks (extension) software like 'raindrop.io' (on your home computer) that has an associated web site you could reference at the library, I'm of no help.
Thank you for the reply!
A combination of things worked for me;
I changed the shield settings to allow all cookies, but it still wasn't working.
Then I disabled the raindrop.io extension and it ended up working. That was more the culprit than anything!
Oooh. I've been looking for a Pocket alternative because the app recently just flat out refused to work on my phone (no idea why - even their support team can't figure it out). Raindrop.io looks gorgeous... almost like Pocket, Feedly, and Pinterest had a baby.
How fortunate that today is tuesday and I'm a noob! :D
> TL;DR: Just today I decided I'm becoming a collector! What's everything useful that I need to know?
I'm seeing this thread and community literally for the first time. So: hi, people!
Thing is: when amiibo were first released I wasn't in a place to even care about games, and I was traveling and moving all the time, meaning I wouldn't even have where to store/display amiibo. Plus, I don't have a Wii U. So I just kinda ignored it altogether.
But now I'm REALLY excited about the Switch and, watching some Zelda gameplay from last E3, I saw that super cool thing where you can put your Wolf Link amiibo into the game. I was instantly reminded that "oh yeah, amiibo is a thing!", so I went to my local eBay-like site and fell into the rabbit hole. Found a lot of amiibo not exactly cheap, but cheap enough that I plan to buy my first couple of them. :D
I collected my favorites on this list right here: https://raindrop.io/collection/1813572
That said, a few questions:
Anyway, that's it. Thanks!
So after posting, I realized what to search for, so instead of having a stupid post, I'll make it smarter by actually reviewing some of the things I found. If I find what works for me, I'll stop there, if it doesn't I'll keep going.
Here's what its looking like for me currently:
Yes, couldn't agree more. Couple of months ago I was looking for a service which would allow for 2-click-saves (1 for the bookmarklet/plugin and 1 for the folder). Impossible. Most go for horrible dropdowns. Ended up with https://raindrop.io.
I've recently started using this sucker: https://raindrop.io
I'm honestly stunned at how much I dig it, but it seems fairly new, since I can't find much info on it. Would love to hear other opinions.